> Any idea of saving space has to be done on the basis of a study of high 
> volumes of representatively diverse data. Saving 10 bytes is not 
> interesting, but saving 10Gb/minute in a large data processing system 
> is. I will go out on a limb and say that 'style' has no place in good 
> engineering, only good engineering does - correctness, performance, 
> maintainability etc.
>
> With all that in mind - if the community wants to make the appropriate 
> analysis of data and propose a more space-efficient schema, I am not 
> against it. But the needs of correctness (= patient safety) must be 
> satisfied.
>
> - thomas beale
>
>
>
>   
When will the tooling decorate the generated xml archetypes with the 
required attribute?

Pretty printing is the norm.

The text should be normalized & the normalization should be enforceable.

Adam

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> openEHR-technical mailing list
> openEHR-technical at openehr.org
> http://lists.chime.ucl.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/openehr-technical
>   


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